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Clinical Characteristics of Patients with Intermittent Exotropia According to the Response to Short-term Prism Adaptation Test

PURPOSE: To evaluate the prevalence of the prism adaptation response in patients with intermittent exotropia (IXT) using the short-term prism adaptation test (PAT) and to assess factors associated with prism adaptation response in IXT patients. METHODS: A case-controlled retrospective analysis was p...

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Autores principales: Yun, Young In, Kim, Seong-Joon, Jung, Jae Ho
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Korean Ophthalmological Society 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7597609/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33099559
http://dx.doi.org/10.3341/kjo.2020.0039
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author Yun, Young In
Kim, Seong-Joon
Jung, Jae Ho
author_facet Yun, Young In
Kim, Seong-Joon
Jung, Jae Ho
author_sort Yun, Young In
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: To evaluate the prevalence of the prism adaptation response in patients with intermittent exotropia (IXT) using the short-term prism adaptation test (PAT) and to assess factors associated with prism adaptation response in IXT patients. METHODS: A case-controlled retrospective analysis was performed on 113 patients with IXT without prior surgical treatment. Age, sex, visual acuity, refraction, stereoacuity, control scale, type of exotropia, history of occlusion, and presence of accompanying visual symptoms were recorded. Prism alternate cover test (PACT) was performed with fixation targets at 6 m and 1/3 m. All patients underwent short-term PAT wearing prism glasses that offset the exodeviation previously measured by PACT. After 30 minutes, angle deviation was measured, and patients were classified into either an increase group, which had an increase in deviation ≥5 prism diopters after short-term PAT, or a no-change group. Analysis was performed to investigate the clinical factors influencing the increase in exodeviation after short-term PAT. RESULTS: Fifty patients (44.2%) showed an increase ≥5 prism diopters during distance or near fixation after short-term PAT compared to the previous PACT: 12 patients (10.6%) showed an increment at distance fixation, and 45 patients (39.8%) showed an increase at near fixation. At distance fixation, the increase-group had a significantly smaller maximum angle measured by PACT. At near distance, age at PAT, maximum distance angle, minimum distance angle, maximum near angle, minimum near angle, angle fluctuation at near, and IXT type showed significant associations with positive short-term PAT response. In the multivariate analysis, older age and smaller maximum near angle were significantly associated with positive short-term PAT response at near fixation. CONCLUSIONS: Short-term PAT could be helpful in older IXT patients with a small maximum angle of deviation at near fixation to mitigate the vergence aftereffect and show the maximum angle of deviation.
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spelling pubmed-75976092020-11-03 Clinical Characteristics of Patients with Intermittent Exotropia According to the Response to Short-term Prism Adaptation Test Yun, Young In Kim, Seong-Joon Jung, Jae Ho Korean J Ophthalmol Original Article PURPOSE: To evaluate the prevalence of the prism adaptation response in patients with intermittent exotropia (IXT) using the short-term prism adaptation test (PAT) and to assess factors associated with prism adaptation response in IXT patients. METHODS: A case-controlled retrospective analysis was performed on 113 patients with IXT without prior surgical treatment. Age, sex, visual acuity, refraction, stereoacuity, control scale, type of exotropia, history of occlusion, and presence of accompanying visual symptoms were recorded. Prism alternate cover test (PACT) was performed with fixation targets at 6 m and 1/3 m. All patients underwent short-term PAT wearing prism glasses that offset the exodeviation previously measured by PACT. After 30 minutes, angle deviation was measured, and patients were classified into either an increase group, which had an increase in deviation ≥5 prism diopters after short-term PAT, or a no-change group. Analysis was performed to investigate the clinical factors influencing the increase in exodeviation after short-term PAT. RESULTS: Fifty patients (44.2%) showed an increase ≥5 prism diopters during distance or near fixation after short-term PAT compared to the previous PACT: 12 patients (10.6%) showed an increment at distance fixation, and 45 patients (39.8%) showed an increase at near fixation. At distance fixation, the increase-group had a significantly smaller maximum angle measured by PACT. At near distance, age at PAT, maximum distance angle, minimum distance angle, maximum near angle, minimum near angle, angle fluctuation at near, and IXT type showed significant associations with positive short-term PAT response. In the multivariate analysis, older age and smaller maximum near angle were significantly associated with positive short-term PAT response at near fixation. CONCLUSIONS: Short-term PAT could be helpful in older IXT patients with a small maximum angle of deviation at near fixation to mitigate the vergence aftereffect and show the maximum angle of deviation. Korean Ophthalmological Society 2020-10 2020-10-05 /pmc/articles/PMC7597609/ /pubmed/33099559 http://dx.doi.org/10.3341/kjo.2020.0039 Text en Copyright © 2020 Korean Ophthalmological Society This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Yun, Young In
Kim, Seong-Joon
Jung, Jae Ho
Clinical Characteristics of Patients with Intermittent Exotropia According to the Response to Short-term Prism Adaptation Test
title Clinical Characteristics of Patients with Intermittent Exotropia According to the Response to Short-term Prism Adaptation Test
title_full Clinical Characteristics of Patients with Intermittent Exotropia According to the Response to Short-term Prism Adaptation Test
title_fullStr Clinical Characteristics of Patients with Intermittent Exotropia According to the Response to Short-term Prism Adaptation Test
title_full_unstemmed Clinical Characteristics of Patients with Intermittent Exotropia According to the Response to Short-term Prism Adaptation Test
title_short Clinical Characteristics of Patients with Intermittent Exotropia According to the Response to Short-term Prism Adaptation Test
title_sort clinical characteristics of patients with intermittent exotropia according to the response to short-term prism adaptation test
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7597609/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33099559
http://dx.doi.org/10.3341/kjo.2020.0039
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